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CompleteMartialArts.com - Hapkido: Korean Art of Self-Defense (Korean Arts Series)

Hapkido: Korean Art of Self-Defense (Korean Arts Series)
List Price: $15.00
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Manufacturer: Black Belt Communications
Average Customer Rating: Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5Average rating of 3.0/5

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Binding: Paperback
Dewey Decimal Number: 796.8153
EAN: 9780897500111
ISBN: 0897500113
Label: Black Belt Communications
Manufacturer: Black Belt Communications
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 192
Publication Date: 1974-09-01
Publisher: Black Belt Communications
Studio: Black Belt Communications

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Editorial Reviews:

Here is the first complete book in English on hapkido, the kick-oriented Korean martial art. Included are warm-up exercises, basic fighting position, punching and striking, blocks and kicks, and hapkido defenses. Illustrated with more than 500 dynamic photographs.


Spotlight customer reviews:

Customer Rating: Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5Average rating of 3/5
Summary: Provides A Pretty Good Overview On The Art Of Hapkido
Comment: "The purpose of this book is to introduce the student to Hapkido in the clearest terms, with special emphasis on the basic techniques and principles of the art." This quote by the author really put the scope of this book into perspective and its on that particular note that I base my review for this book.

As a basic overall guide to the art of Hapkido, I would have to say that the author actually does a pretty good job especially when you consider the fact that this book initially came out in 1974. It really doesn't explain to you how to adequately perform any of the techniques shown as that is not what the author had intended. Instead this book gives you a really good overview of numerous different individual components that make up the art of Hapkido. Some of those components which are included in this book are as follows:

HISTORY
PHILOSOPHY
BREATHING
STRIKING AREAS
WARM-UP EXERCISES
PUNCHING & STRIKING
BLOCKS
KICKS
HAPKIDO DEFENSES
SELF-DEFENSE
TARGET AREAS

Each section gives you a brief overview of a variety of techniques that fall under each particular heading. For example; under the "Kicks" section, the author demonstrates how to execute several different kicks including:

Front Kick (Achieving Kicking Excellence, Vol. 6)
Side Kick (Achieving Kicking Excellence, Vol. 10)
Roundhouse Kick (Achieving Kicking Excellence, Vol. 9)
Wheel Kick (Achieving Kicking Excellence, Vol. 2)

If you were looking to learn how to execute a particular technique, then this book would be somewhat of a disappointment. However, if you are looking for a good overview on the art of Hapkido, then this book would definitely be a good choice.

Shawn Kovacich
Martial Artist/Author of the Achieving Kicking Excellence series.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: GM Bong Soo Han was one of the Great HKD Grand Masters
Comment: As I write this review, it has been just over a year since Grandmaster Bong Soo Han passed away. It was quite a loss for the Hapkido community. Many of us first learned of Hapkido in the 1970s from the Billy Jack movies, with GM doing the fight scenes in Billy Jack, and then having a speaking roll as a Hapkido master in Trial of Billy Jack.

This book, published back when those movies first came out was one of the first English books on the art of Hapkido. Unfortunately, like other reviewers have already posted, the book offers nowhere near what Hapkido offers or the wealth of Hapkido knowledge GM Has possessed.

The book has a tiny bit of history and philosophy (3 pages) and then four pages about tan-jon breathing, an important part of Hapkido training. Then the book illustrates pictures of the striking parts of one's body. After that, there are 20 some pages of basic warm up and stretching drills. After that, you have a basic picture text of fighting positions, strikes, blocks, and kicks. All of these are shown with photographs with brief written descriptions.

The next section of Hapkido Defenses focuses mainly on punching and kicking back after blocking incoming strikes and kicks. The joint locks and throws that hapkido is known for are missing in these defenses.

Finally, in the very last chapter titled Self-Defense Techniques, with a female performing the techniques and not GM Han, we see our first joint lock. It is an outer wrist lock applied against a cross arm grab. There is one other arm bar type technique, and that's about it for the devastating joint locks that the hapkido curriculum contains. (Joint locks, by the way, are probably my favorite techniques of hapkido, thus the reason I spend a lot of time teaching them in seminars and videos) The book also lacked any mention of the weapons hapkido contains.

Overall, there are better resources for hapkido. And while there are not nearly as many books on hapkido as some other arts, this book is one of the most lacking in regards to joint locks, throws, and weapons that hapkido is know for.

So why the five stars? Good question. I gave the book five stars out of respect for Grand Master Han. I feel very fortunate to have had the opportunity to meet him at his school a number of years ago, and then to return to his school to take part in a black belt class he was teaching. He was one of the pioneers of hapkido and he lived and shared the art with so many. I knew the book was not the best book on hapkido when I purchased it. But because it was by GM Han, I wanted it in my hapkido library. For that reason, out of respect for one of the great hapkido Grand Masters, I recommend the book for any hapkidoin's library.


Customer Rating: Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5Average rating of 2/5
Summary: Not what I experienced
Comment: I trained at Grand Master Han's studio in Santa Monica, CA in the late '80s. I was a blue belt working for my brown when I moved and could no longer attend classes there. This book is an extremely oversimplified representation of what I experienced. I cannot explain the shortcomings of the book other than it being dated and one of the first books written in English on the subject. Lost in translation? Maybe. Grand Master Han was a great man. This book is a pale representation of his teachings.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5Average rating of 4/5
Summary: Early, important work
Comment: I agree with James Lee that the people who criticize this book don't understand its significance. It was one of the first books out in English on Hapkido, and so of course it presents the style's basic techniques in a non-technical and easy to understand way. At the time few people knew what Hapkido was, and O'Hara's book was designed as a basic intro to the art, not a definitive text. The book is brief and could have been longer, to be sure, but that's what further volumes are for.

I also was fortunate enough once to visit Master Han's studio in Los Angeles back in the early 70s and had a chance to observe his class, and see one of his black belts teach, and they were practicing the same basics presented in this book.

Of course, with the easy availability of inexpensive videos these days, older books like this are less important than they were at the time, since you can learn so much more by watching the techniques in action. But for its time, this was a pioneering effort and introduced the art of Hapkido to many people for the first time.

Customer Rating: Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5Average rating of 5/5
Summary: Great Place to Start
Comment: As a Hapkido practitioner for over twenty years, this was the first book I purchased on the subject. It is written by one of the most respected masters of the art in the world and it presents the essential elements of this style in a direct and easy to understand format.

People who have criticized this book do not understand the essential importance of the basics in Hapkido. This is what this book presents, the essential basics, which all of the advanced techniques of Hapkido are based upon.

This book is a must for any library on Hapkido.





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